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MENU THINGYRomans |
The Romans
The first book on the Romans I
ever bought was R.H. Barrow's Pelican volume entitled, quite simply, The Romans. I acquired it on a
school
trip to Bath, unaware that on the other side of the Abbey was the house
of Marshall
Wade, usually (and mistakenly) attributed with the destruction of
some
30 miles of Hadrian's
Wall in order to build a road. Next came Graham
Webster's The Roman Imperial Army
(amazingly
still one of the best books on the subject), then The Sunday Times Roman Army Wallchart,
and the rest, as they say, is ancient history, with a little help from
one of those inspirational teachers government adverts for the teaching
profession like to talk about (except Mr Fielding was real, not the
product of the tortured imagination of some desperate advertising
copywriter). Thus the Romans, as pert a bunch of people as ever there were and, it has to be said (in true Sellars and Yeatman fashion), generally A Good Thing.
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